Ever since
Neil Armstrong took his "one giant leap" onto the moon's surface
forty years ago this July, the world has never gotten a good look at him during
that momentous event. Neither the fuzzy black-and-white TV images transmitted
to Earth, nor the handful of still photos taken of him on the moon show
Armstrong well.
Now, in a new book by Apollo historian Andrew Chaikin, a new image of
the Apollo 11 astronaut taken early in the moonwalk brings readers face-to-face
with Armstrong on the moon. The book, "Voices from the Moon: Apollo
Astronauts Describe Their Lunar Experiences," which is now on store
shelves, draws on the extensive
interviews Chaikin performed with 23 of the 24 moon voyagers while researching
his 1994 Apollo book, "A Man on the Moon."
Chaikin, who co-authored the new book with wife Victoria Kohl, first
saw the new image of Armstrong in 1986 while researching "A Man
on the Moon," which became the basis for Tom Hanks' HBO miniseries,
"From The Earth to the Moon."
At the time, Chaikin was screening Apollo
film footage at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "When I looked at
the footage of the Apollo 11 moonwalk, I saw something that really got my
attention," Chaikin recalled in an interview with collectSPACE.com. In the
scenes of Armstrong collecting the first sample of moon dust, Chaikin saw
something he was not expecting: the astronaut's face.
"I could see that Armstrong had raised his outer visor, the gold visor
that normally obscures an astronaut's face from view, and that was something
that always stayed with me as something that was very cool," said Chaikin.
"So, when I got into "Voices from the Moon" and I wanted to make
use of the best
mission photography that I could get my hands on, one of the prime things I
wanted to put in the book was a high definition scan of [that scene] with Neil
Armstrong standing on the moon."
Chaikin
obtained a high-definition scan made by NASA of the Apollo 11 on-board motion
picture footage from Spacecraft Films, a company that has been remastering the
original footage for release on DVD.
"I was able to get several, really good screen grabs from that sequence...
and from those individual frames I chose what I thought was the best,"
described Chaikin. "You can clearly see his face within the spacesuit. To
me, this one was the real keeper." Chaikin made "minimal color
correction and processing" to the image in producing it for the book. The
image, in his opinion, is better than any of the 70 millimeter photography
taken of Armstrong on the surface.
"There were other photographs of Neil Armstrong on the moon of course,
taken with the Hasselblad camera. But none of those photos shows him from the
front in very good light," he explained. "Even though the Hasselblad
photography is inherently higher resolution then [the] 16 millimeter movie
footage still, in order to get the best view of Armstrong on the moon we have
to go to [that film]."
"That's why I feel these frames — in particular, the one I put in
"Voices from the Moon" — really are the best view we have of
Armstrong on the moon," declared Chaikin.
Chaikin's use of the movie stills was not limited to Apollo 11 and Neil
Armstrong. In "Voices from the Moon," he presents other missions' and
other astronauts' images as a combination of still photography and film stills
to accompany the extensive quotes from his interviews.
"I've always loved the type of storytelling where you can combine words
and pictures," admitted Chaikin.
"I have done it before in other space photography books and I really
enjoyed getting back to that with 'Voices from the Moon'."
"As I looked at these pictures, I began to want to hear the astronauts'
voices talking about the experience. So, that was really the inspiration for
'Voices from the Moon'," said Chaikin.
To learn more about "Voices from the Moon", see author Andrew
Chaikin's website and blog at andrewchaikin.com.
Click here to
visit collectSPACE.com to see the new image of Neil Armstrong on
the Moon, as well as video clips from the interview with Andrew Chaikin.
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